Current:Home > ContactSan Francisco Becomes the Latest City to Ban Natural Gas in New Buildings, Citing Climate Effects -TradeWisdom
San Francisco Becomes the Latest City to Ban Natural Gas in New Buildings, Citing Climate Effects
Poinbank Exchange View
Date:2025-04-09 16:03:11
New homes, offices and restaurants in San Francisco will soon be powered by electricity alone.
The city’s Board of Supervisors voted unanimously on Tuesday to ban natural gas in new buildings, meaning that stoves, furnaces and water heaters will no longer burn gas for heat. The city cited cost savings, public health benefits and the urgent need to wind down greenhouse gas emissions to help curb the rapidly warming climate for the move.
“Natural gas is the second largest source of greenhouse gas emissions in San Francisco and poses major health and safety risks,” tweeted Rafael Mandelman, San Francisco’s District 8 supervisor and the author of the new ordinance. “All-electric construction in new buildings is a critical step toward a safer, healthier San Francisco and planet for future generations.”
Burning natural gas not only emits the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide, but the gas itself—methane—is a short-lived climate super pollutant, capable of warming the planet 87 times more than CO2 when leaked into the atmosphere.
San Francisco now joins a growing list of municipalities—most of them in California—that are attempting to tackle the climate crisis by shrinking the massive climate footprint of their buildings. Residential and commercial buildings account for more than 40 percent of San Francisco’s total greenhouse gas emissions, with the burning of natural gas responsible for the bulk of that, according to the city’s estimates.
It’s a similar story nationwide. Heating homes and other buildings generates 12 percent of the nation’s total emissions, says the Environmental Protection Agency. And natural gas makes up a large portion of that slice, responsible for nearly 40 percent of the country’s total carbon emissions released each year, or 619 million metric tons of CO2, according to the Energy Information Administration.
That’s why San Francisco moving forward with a ban is a big deal, said Amanda Myers, a senior policy analyst for Energy Innovation, a think tank that promotes clean energy. If cities in California continue to rely on gas to heat new buildings through the next decade, Myers said, it will become increasingly difficult—if not impossible—for the state to meet its binding climate target of reaching carbon neutrality by 2045.
More importantly, Myers said, the move could help inspire broader statewide or even nationwide action. “We need to stop digging a hole on fossil fuel usage,” she said. “We need to stop building things that will use fossil fuels for years and years to come.”
It’s clear that momentum is increasing for switching to electricity rather than gas in buildings. After Berkeley, California, became the first U.S. city to pass a natural gas ban for new buildings last year, dozens of other cities across the state followed suit, including San Jose, Mountain View, Santa Rosa and Brisbane. In total, 39 California cities have adopted building codes—including bans—aimed at reducing the burning of methane and expanding electrification, according to a list compiled by the Sierra Club.
Brookline, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston, also passed a ban on natural gas hookups in new buildings last year, but the state’s attorney general struck down the ban because state law preempted the city’s ordinance. California’s constitution, on the other hand, allows city regulations to exceed state ones.
But the electrification movement has also been met with growing resistance, mostly from industry groups and Republican-led state legislatures. Arizona, Tennessee, Oklahoma and Louisiana all passed laws this year that prohibit local governments from adopting electrification measures or natural gas bans similar to the ones passed in California. And at least four other states introduced similar measures, including a bill in Texas being supported by utilities.
Advocates for electrification, however, point to plummeting prices for renewables and savings from health benefits as a reason to push for broader adoption by governments. Utility scale solar and wind are now considered cheaper than natural gas in almost every case, according to the financial firm Lazard’s latest analysis of the levelized cost of energy, a metric used to determine the cost of electricity for a power plant over its lifetime. And a recent study out of the University of California, Berkeley found that switching to clean energy sources would inject $1.7 trillion into the U.S. economy over the next 15 years, and prevent up to 85,000 premature deaths by 2050.
Still, even with San Francisco’s commitment, the efforts to electrify the nation’s buildings are moving too slowly if the world is to avoid some of the worst climate outcomes by the end of the century, said Energy Innovation’s Myers. She hopes that under the Biden administration, that work might get some greater traction.
“States and local governments need to keep moving forward,” she said. “But now we’re looking at what kind of action we can do federally.”
veryGood! (5599)
Related
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- Climate Change Makes a (Very) Brief Appearance in Dueling Town Halls Held by Trump and Biden
- Where Mama June Shannon Stands With Her Daughters After Family Tension
- Amazon Reviewers Swear By These 15 Affordable Renter-Friendly Products
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- Ohio River May Lose Its Regional Water Quality Standards, Vote Suggests
- Here's How Succession Ended After 4 Seasons
- Why do some people get rashes in space? There's a clue in astronaut blood
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Millionaire says OceanGate CEO offered him discount tickets on sub to Titanic, claimed it was safer than scuba diving
Ranking
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Teen who walked six miles to 8th grade graduation gets college scholarship on the spot
- These kids revamped their schoolyard. It could be a model to make cities healthier
- New federal rules will limit miners' exposure to deadly disease-causing dust
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- For the intersex community, 'Every Body' exists on a spectrum
- Hoop dreams of a Senegalese b-baller come true at Special Olympics
- Opioids are overrated for some common back pain, a study suggests
Recommendation
The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
What were the mysterious banging noises heard during the search for the missing Titanic sub?
Canada’s Struggling to Build Oil Pipelines, and That’s Starting to Hurt the Industry
Malaria cases in Texas and Florida are the first U.S. spread since 2003, the CDC says
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
Best Memorial Day 2023 Home Deals: Dyson, Vitamix, Le Creuset, Sealy, iRobot, Pottery Barn, and More
Lawyers fined for filing bogus case law created by ChatGPT
Controversial Enbridge Line 3 Oil Pipeline Approved in Minnesota Wild Rice Region